noun
- a printing process that creates tones and shades using small dots or lines, commonly used in comic books and commercial printing
Usage: also called benday process; named after inventor Benjamin Day; printing and graphic design term
verb
- to apply the benday process to (a printed image) to create tones and shades
Usage: printing and graphic design term; often used in past tense as 'bendayed'
Examples
- The comic book artist used benday to add color and depth to the illustration.
- The printer applied benday dots to create the shading in the vintage advertisement.
- Early comic books were often bendayed to achieve a wider range of colors with limited printing plates.
- The benday process allowed publishers to produce colorful images more economically.
- The designer decided to benday the photograph for a stylized, retro effect.
- Benday patterns are visible when you examine old comic book pages under magnification.